Latinx Children and Surgery
a study on Postoperative Pain Pain
Summary
- Eligibility
- for people ages 2-7 (full criteria)
- Healthy Volunteers
- healthy people welcome
- Location
- at Orange, California
- Dates
- study startedcompletion around
- Principal Investigator
- by Zeev Kain
Description
Summary
Over 60 million persons in the United States (US) identify themselves as Latinx and 25.6% are children under the age of 16.
Surgical disparities for adults and children have been identified as a major problem in the US and can be experienced at multiple points along a patient's health care trajectory. Data from the investigator's center indicates that a substantial portion of Latinx children who undergo surgery experience high anxiety and postoperative pain as well as postoperative impairments in psychological and physical functioning as compared to White non-Latin children who undergo surgery. Recent growth in use of mobile devices provides us an opportunity to create low-cost mobile health (mHealth) behavioral interventions to reduce this disparity in surgical outcomes.
In a previous National Institutes of Health (NIH) award, the principal investigator (PI) developed and tested an evidence based mHealth tailored intervention (WebTIPS) that aims to prepare and be a companion of a child and their family during a surgical event. WebTIPS aims to enhance the recovery of the child in several ways such as reducing anxiety and pain and is based on information provision, modeling, and teaching of coping skills. WebTIPS, however, was developed and validated with a population of primarily White non-Latinx English-speaking children and their parents. Unfortunately, it is well established that mHealth interventions are significantly less effective when used with specific ethnic minorities unless they underwent a process of cultural adaptation. Over the past 4-years, the investigators have established multiple academic and community collaborations, conducted extensive participatory research with Latinx stakeholders and used the heuristic framework and a modified ecological validity model to culturally adapt WebTIPS. The culturally adapted intervention is called L-WebTIPS. The overall aim of this application is to reduce surgical disparities in a population of Latinx children undergoing surgery. The first phase of this application (R61) includes web programming of L-WebTIPS, conduct formative evaluation and conduct feasibly randomized control trial (RCT) to test this intervention. The second phase (R33) includes a multi-center RCT which aims to determine the effectiveness of L-WebTIPS compared to attention control intervention in decreasing postoperative pain, opioids consumption and lowering anxiety in Latinx children undergoing outpatient surgery. Secondary aims of the R33 include examining the impact of L-WebTIPS on home-based clinical recovery parameters such as pain, analgesic requirements, new onset behavioral changes and return to normal daily activity in Latinx children undergoing outpatient surgery. The investigators also plan to determine if the use of L-WebTIPS reduces anxiety and improve experience among the parents of Latinx children undergoing surgery.
Finally, the investigators plan to determine if the use of L-WebTIPS reduces anxiety and enhance experience among the parents of Latinx children undergoing surgery. The investigators submit that using a cultural adaption process for an existing validated intervention will accelerate the process of reducing surgical disparities and bringing an effective intervention to clinical settings and routine use.
Keywords
Pain, Postoperative, Pain, Acute, Postoperative Pain, L-WebTIPS, L-WebINFO
Eligibility
You can join if…
Open to people ages 2-7
Children:
- Children age 2-7 who are scheduled to undergo outpatient surgery.
- Children of Latinx parents, who speak Spanish as a primary language and who may speak English
- Children whose health status is American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) physical status I-III will be recruited for this study. ASA status I refers to "patients who are normal and healthy with no known systemic disease". ASA status II refers to "patients who have mild or well-controlled systemic diseases," such as non-insulin dependent diabetes, upper respiratory conditions, well-controlled asthma or allergies. ASA status III refers to patients who have moderate or severe systemic disease, which does limit their activities (e.g., stable angina or diabetes with systemic sequellae). This criteria was chosen as this group of children will typically undergo surgery in an outpatient setting. ASA status IV children will most likely undergo surgery in an inpatient setting and represents a much sicker population of children with different barriers.
- Only children who are in the normal range of development will be recruited for this study. This will be assessed by report from the parents at the time of recruitment. The rationale for excluding patients with developmental delay is that it is unknown whether parents manage their children's postoperative pain differently than in the general population. To generalize the findings to the general population, children with developmental delays will be excluded.
You CAN'T join if...
- Children with health status defined by ASA status IV-V will be excluded from this study. ASA status IV refers to "patients with an incapacitating systemic disease that is a constant threat to life". ASA status V "patients are considered moribund".
- Children whose parents do not identify as Latinx will be excluded from this study.
- Children who are taking psychotropic or pain medications that affect emotion modulation will be excluded from this study because of the potential for confounding effects on pain.
- Children with current malignant or any other disease or pain condition will be excluded as this may impact postoperative pain and thus be a confounding variable.
Parent:
Inclusion Criteria:
- Latinx Parents of children who are enrolled in the study who speak Spanish as a primary language and who may speak English.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Parents who refuse to be part of the study.
- Parents who do not speak Spanish as the primary language.
Location
- Children's Hospital of Orange County
accepting new patients
Orange California 92868 United States
Lead Scientist at UC Irvine
Details
- Status
- accepting new patients
- Start Date
- Completion Date
- (estimated)
- Sponsor
- University of California, Irvine
- ID
- NCT06020677
- Study Type
- Interventional
- Participants
- Expecting 120 study participants
- Last Updated
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